The game introduces the control scheme, offering you control of each shot with the right analog stick, with accuracy, precision, and power. So you need to choose your favorite one and jump into the game to show off your skills in front of your opponent and defeat them to win the match.
There are several professional teams, players, and clubs available. The game lets you experience the detailed sports gameplay, following the standard rules of Tennis. The stats have a suitable RPG feel to them and managing your player's progress gives you reason to come back to the game when no one else is around to play.Grand Slam Tennis 2 is a Sports, Single-player and Multiplayer Tennis video game developed by EA Canada and published by EA Sports for Multiple Platforms. Being able to create your own rising tennis star (especially using EA's online Game Face tools) is a lot of fun. Venus Williams is in, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic, and more! Of course, if you would rather see yourself in the game, you can always create a player, go into career mode, and be well on your own path toward a virtual tennis career.Ĭareer mode is actually where I had the most fun with this game. EA must have spent a fortune in licensing fees because you can play pretty much any modern day tennis great. That being said, tennis aficionados will find this game to be a real treat. Besides, the new control scheme feels just as good and your arm won't be sore in the morning.
Learning to use the motion controls is essentially learning how to play Tennis, and this means that many of us will get frustrated with the Move controls rather quickly. Grand Slam Tennis 2 on the Move is definitely not as lazy as its older brother. Well, it was a little more involved than that, but it was basically still a controller when all was said and done. When you played Grand Slam Tennis 1 on the Wii, or even Nintendo's own Wii Sports Tennis, you could basically just flick your wrist to get the type of shot you wanted. On the other hand, most gamers aren't professional tennis players. If you are looking for a sort of virtual reality tennis simulator, then this is exactly what you are looking for. You have to put real power behind your swings and tiny twists of the wrist will send your ball flying in the wrong direction. In terms of accuracy, the game has the tennis feel down. That being said, the game does actually include a motion control option through the PS Move, and it is simultaneously one of the best and worst motion control schemes out there. It's a really interesting innovation that works well for its game genre, and I applaud EA for trying something new and succeeding at it.
When you get to high levels of play, you will find yourself comfortably moving your thumb from the stick to the face buttons and back with relative ease.
Leisurely swinging with the analog stick has a nice feel to it during volleys, but when it comes time to panic your first instinct is to mash a button and hope for the best. Believe it or not, this actually makes you a better player. Intelligently, EA decided to leave traditional button-triggered controls in the game as well, and you can use both control sets in the middle of a match. This gives you the strange feeling of swinging a tennis racket with your thumbs, which is actually quite satisfying. The new system is called "Total Racket Control," and it essentially changes up the swings you use based on the direction and force of flicks of the analog sticks. Their solution was to use the analog sticks in a way that you might expect in an MMA game rather than a tennis game. Since Grand Slam Tennis 1 focused primarily on giving you a case of Tennis elbow in your living room, Grand Slam Tennis 2 needed something equally as interesting but with a little less fatigue associated with it. However, the allure of motion controls has faded, so Grand Slam Tennis needed to step up its game for its next iteration.ĮA decided to focus on the thing that sets sports games apart from each other the most: the gameplay. This is the case with the original Grand Slam Tennis, which, unfortunately, was mostly a waggle fest back in the days when waggle fests were still getting all the publicity. Ever since the Wii came out, tennis games and motion controls have been fated to keep crossing paths.